Dynamic JSON (or other) content can really foul up retrieving a web page as both ie.Busy and ie.ReadyState appear to have completed the page delivery but the desired content is yet to arrive. I've been fighting a losing battle with one of these sites on and off for a while...

try this to get the value of the elements by tag name. I had similar problems and I've learned that the javascript function getElementsByTagName has different behaviors depending on the browser in which it is used. This is a workaround that I have used in different projects and it seems...

As you can only have one table with the id "specialID", you can do this: $("#specialId input").each(function () { // ...do stuff with the input }); However, in the general case where you might have more than one outer element and want to handle things on inner elements for only...

You should understand the data flow carefully here. The inputs to the XSL transformation are the XML and XSL stylesheet. The output is HTML including the script element. An HTML browser displays the HTML and waits for user interface events that it will deliver to HTML elements. You will want...

There is no use of innerHtml.As document.getElementsByTagName() is index based and it will return an array of all the h1 elements of the page more info on this. As here is only one h1 element,so you should write var y = document.getElementsByTagName('h1')[0]; Also it is better to initialize the array...

Consider using mutation observers. Watch for childList with subtree: true. When the notification arrives, you can examine each added node with matches to see if it matches some selector. function querySelectorAllLive(element, selector) { // Initialize results with current nodes. var result = Array.prototype.slice.call(element.querySelectorAll(selector)); // Create observer instance. var observer =...

querySelector and friends accept a CSS selector as their argument. var not_span = document.querySelectorAll(":not(span)"); If you wanted to simplify your existing approach, then you could look at using toLowerCase instead of two different string comparisons and using Array.prototype.filter instead of manually copying the values: function allElementsExceptSpans() { return Array.prototype.filter.call(document.getElementsByTagName("*"), function(element)...

you have got test as an array and looping through it you can reference that particular item with test[i]. this will be referring to window object. replace this.setAttribute('title', 'test1' + i); with test[i].setAttribute('title', 'test1' + i); Same goes for test2 also. Working output below var test1 = document.getElementById('test1').getElementsByTagName('a'); var test2...

getElementsByTagName works by tag name, e.g. input or div or span, not the name attribute. If you want to get those elements by their name, you can use querySelectorAll: var list = document.querySelectorAll('input[name="ciudades[]"]'); querySelectorAll is supported by all modern browsers, and also IE8. Or as you've tagged your question jquery:...

It returns an System.Windows.Forms.HtmlElementCollection, which implements neither IEnumerable nor IEnumerator. That means it doesn't work like yield. yield indicates that a method is an iterator. In addition, for a method to be an iterator, its return type must be IEnumerable, IEnumerable<T>, IEnumerator, or IEnumerator<T>. See also: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/9k7k7cf0.aspx...

From the developer firefox documentation: While the W3C DOM 3 Core specification says elements is a NodeList that was simply because of a an attempt to have the "core" specification not depend on the "html" specification at that time. The DOM 4 draft says that elements is an HTMLCollection. Gecko/Firefox...

If, for example, all your inputs had a name attribute, then you can get all the elements by tag name, and loop through them to get the name attribute settings: <html> <body> <p>Inputs:</p> <input type="text" value="coffee" name="beverage"> <input type="text" value="Chef salad" name="salad"> <input type="text" value="Beef" name="mainCourse"> <input type="text" value="Cake" name="desert">...

Date and time based input times are usually not available on desktop browsers. As such, input elements with such a type defined will default to the text type. So when you access the element’s type you get whatever type the browser is actually using for that element. If you want...

getElementsByTagName gives you a NodeList with matching elements in it. You access the elements using either A) brackets notation: [n] where n is 0 <= n < list.length, or B) Using .item(n) (same range for n). So for instance, this accesses the first td in the document: var daysInWeek =...

If you are targeting IE8 and above then: document.querySelector("li.campID input").value="John"; else: Assuming for the first LI and Input alone: var liListItem = document.getElementsByClassName("campID")[0], inputElement = liListItem.getElementsByTagName("input")[0]; inputElement.value = "John"; document.getElementsByClassName("campID") returns you NodeList. So you need to probably loop over and do....